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etrothed
at birth to Prince Phillip (the son of a neighboring king), the infant Aurora is blessed with the gifts of beauty
and song by the good fairies of the kingdom. However, fate's icy hand brings an uninvited guest to the christening
and the evil fairy Maleficent curses the child to die by the prick of a spinning wheel's spindle before her 16th
birthday. Struggling to prevent this catastrophe, the good fairies hide the princess in a secluded cottage in
the glen. The years pass and Aurora blossoms into a lovely but lonely young woman unaware of her real name and
birthright. Playacting with the forest animals at what it might be like to meet a prince, Princess Aurora, now
called "Briar Rose," meets a very real "peasant boy." Although neither of them knows who the other is, the couple
falls in love at first sight. When the good fairies reveal Princess Aurora's birthright to her, instead of joy, an
awful sadness comes over her. For she believes she must sacrifice her true love to the "right and royal duty" of
marrying Prince Phillip, a stranger. Just as she's about to discover that the two are one and the same, she's
stricken by Maleficent's terrible curse. All seems lost but for one glimmer of hope ... only true love's kiss can
wake this sleeping beauty from an eternal slumber.
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Aurora's original character design by Tom Oreb was modeled after the thin,
elegant features of actress Audrey Hepburn. Working with Mr. Oreb, Aurora's lead animator, Marc Davis, slightly
sharpened her features and clothes to blend with the backgrounds' angular shapes, arriving at the Aurora we see
onscreen.
Film: "Sleeping Beauty" (1959)
Voice Artist: Mary Costa Live-Action Reference: Helene Stanley
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